Global Standards for the Microelectronics Industry
Standards & Documents Search
Title | Document # | Date |
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RECOMMENDED ESD TARGET LEVELS FOR HBM/MM QUALIFICATIONStatus: Reaffirmed January 2024 |
JEP155B | Jul 2018 |
This document was written with the intent to provide information for quality organizations in both semiconductor companies and their customers to assess and make decisions on safe ESD level requirements. It will be shown through this document why realistic modifying of the ESD target levels for component level ESD is not only essential but is also urgent. The document is organized in different sections to give as many technical details as possible to support the purpose given in the abstract. In June 2009 the formulating committee approved the addition of the ESDA logo on the covers of this document. Please see Annex C for revision history. Reaffirmed: January 2024 Free download. Registration or login required. |
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RECOMMENDED ESD-CDM TARGET LEVELS |
JEP157A | Apr 2022 |
This document was written with the intent to provide information for quality organizations in both semiconductor companies and their customers to assess and make decisions on safe ESD CDM level requirements. Free download. Registration or login required. |
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SYSTEM LEVEL ESD: PART II: IMPLEMENTATION OF EFFECTIVE ESD ROBUST DESIGNSThis is an editorial revision, details can be found in Annex F. |
JEP162A.01 | Jan 2021 |
This document, while establishing the complex nature of System Level ESD, proposes that an efficient ESD design can only be achieved when the interaction of the various components under ESD conditions are analyzed at the system level. This objective requires an appropriate characterization of the components and a methodology to assess the entire system using simulation data. This is applicable to system failures of different categories (such as hard, soft, and electromagnetic interference (EMI)). This type of systematic approach is long overdue and represents an advanced design approach which replaces the misconception, as discussed in detail in JEP161, that a system will be sufficiently robust if all components exceed a certain ESD level. Free download. Registration or login required. |
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UNDERSTANDING ELECTRICAL OVERSTRESS - EOSStatus: Reaffirmed May 2022 |
JEP174 | Sep 2016 |
This purpose of this white paper will be to introduce a new perspective about EOS to the electronics industry. As failures exhibiting EOS damage are commonly experienced in the industry, and these severe overstress events are a factor in the damage of many products, the intent of the white paper is to clarify what EOS really is and how it can be mitigated once it is properly comprehended. Committee(s): JC-14.3 Free download. Registration or login required. |
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SYSTEM LEVEL ESD PART 1: COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS AND RECOMMENDED BASIC APPROACHESStatus: ReaffirmedApril 2023 |
JEP161 | Jan 2011 |
This report is the first part of a two part document. Part I will primarily address hard failures characterized by physical damage to a system (failure category d as classified by IEC 61000-4-2). Soft failures, in which the system’s operation is upset without physical damage, are also critical and predominant in many cases. Free download. Registration or login required. |